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John the Fearless: The Growth of Burgundian Power (1966)

par Richard Vaughan

Séries: Dukes of Burgundy (2)

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John the Fearless, second Duke of Burgundy, is one of the more dramatic and puzzling characters among medieval rulers. He inherited the newly created duchy from his father, and defended and developed its power ruthlessly during his ducal reign (1404-1419). In the process, he allied himself with the English party in France, with whom he was supposed to have made an 'infernal pact', and came to dominate French politics; his manoeuvres led directly to his assassination on the bridge of Montereau in the presence of Charles, dauphin of France, who may have been personally involved. Indeed, the main theme of the book is John the Fearless's activities in France, which are seen in the light of the continued need to exploit French resources for the benefit of Burgundy. John also continued to build on the administrative and financial structures created by his father, which were the mainstay of the ducal power, and he had to deal with the restlessness of the Flemish towns, only recently made part of the Burgundian state.More than any other Burgundian ruler, it is John's personality which determines the course of events: violent and unscrupulous, one quality which John the Fearless completely lacked was prudence. He was a masterful opportunist, who acted impulsively with speed and decision, on the spur of the moment. In the end it was one of his own favoured weapons, political assassination, which was turned against him.… (plus d'informations)
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The second in Vaughan's classic history of the dukes of Burgundy, originally published in 1966 and republished by Boydell with updated introduction and bibliography. As in the first volume it begins with political/military history, followed by institutional history, but this time the first political/military section only covers Duke John's career to 1409, after which the institutional section intervenes followed by a second political/military section culminating in Duke John's infamous assassination at Montereau which paved the way for the Anglo-Burgundian alliance which played a key role in the ongoing Hundred Years War. The first political/military section portrays John the Fearless as effective but unpleasant; he followed up his brilliant defeat of the popular revolt of Liege by brutal repression; he had his rival Duke Louis of Orleans murdered on a very flimsy pretext of attempting to kill King Charles Vi by magic --I have always felt there was a moral/ethical case for tyrannicide, but if he wanted to make out Louis to be a tyrant, there were better grounds than alleged black magic (or even Louis's alleged attempt to seduce John's duchess). I had not known, or forgotten, that John also had a noted senior royal bureaucrat, John Montagu, executed again on flimsy grounds for partisan reasons. Killing Duke John may have been politically suicidally stupid in the midst of the English war, but he certainly had provided plenty of provocation. ( )
  antiquary | Jul 3, 2015 |
2187 John the Fearless: The Growth of Burgundian Power, by Richard Vaughan (read 16 Feb 1989) This is pure history, and so is not too exciting to read. The author in his Conclusion talks of his "all too brief visits to the archives of Lille, Dijon and Brussels." It is amazing how much he was able to find concerning many very trivial details in the time of John the Fearless, who became Duke of Burgundy upon the death of Philip the Bold on 17 April 1404 and was killed (the author concludes premeditatively by the party of the Dauphin who became Charles VII of France) on the bridge at Montereau (at the confluence of the river Seine and the river Yonne) on Sunday, Sept 10, 1419. It was a violent time, John the Fearless having in 1407 caused the death of Charles VI's brother in Paris. The book was not too interesting but was worth reading. The author says John the Fearless was a loyal Burgundian and that it is incorrect to call him a disloyal French prince--in those days the French "state" did not exist as such in the area where John the Fearless was in control. ( )
  Schmerguls | Jun 30, 2008 |
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John the Fearless, second Duke of Burgundy, is one of the more dramatic and puzzling characters among medieval rulers. He inherited the newly created duchy from his father, and defended and developed its power ruthlessly during his ducal reign (1404-1419). In the process, he allied himself with the English party in France, with whom he was supposed to have made an 'infernal pact', and came to dominate French politics; his manoeuvres led directly to his assassination on the bridge of Montereau in the presence of Charles, dauphin of France, who may have been personally involved. Indeed, the main theme of the book is John the Fearless's activities in France, which are seen in the light of the continued need to exploit French resources for the benefit of Burgundy. John also continued to build on the administrative and financial structures created by his father, which were the mainstay of the ducal power, and he had to deal with the restlessness of the Flemish towns, only recently made part of the Burgundian state.More than any other Burgundian ruler, it is John's personality which determines the course of events: violent and unscrupulous, one quality which John the Fearless completely lacked was prudence. He was a masterful opportunist, who acted impulsively with speed and decision, on the spur of the moment. In the end it was one of his own favoured weapons, political assassination, which was turned against him.

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